Saturday 30 June 2012

The Wanderers Return

The end of June!  As DH keeps saying, it will soon be Christmas.  I'm getting back to "normal" now after my final foreign trip for a long time.  I think I must now conserve both energy and money - back to the baked beans and porridge lifestyle.  It doesn't mean I will stop dreaming and planning, my DD has given me the task of finding a holiday destination that fulfills these criteria:
  • not on a fault line (because we've pushed our luck with recent trips)
  • sunny (because life's just better in the sun)
  • with culture, history and ruins (to entertain DD)
  • beyond Europe (for an interesting passport stamp)
  • non-Muslim (for a change of culture from recent holidays together)
  • child-friendly (for Sam)
Ideas on a postcard please!

We had a good trip to Turkey (with some irritations that I won't dwell on as they're finished with) and did several amazing things.  We even went to Greece for the day, to the island of SAMos!!
Darling Sam was happy with a wide variety of forms of transport - car, taxi, aeroplane, coach, porter's cart, bus, boat and dolmus - and the opportunity to swim every day and eat a lot of ice cream and cake.
Saz' highlight was the day we spent in Ephesus .  Only 10% of this massive site has been excavated to date and yet there is so much to see.  It seemed we could still feel the presence of those who once walked through the city, whose feet smoothed the marble streets.
My holiday was made by our visit to Pamukkale, a geological wonder that really deserves to be called  "awesome".
So now it's a day of visiting Sainsbury's, doing the washing and then settling down to watch Wimbledon.  I have blogs, emails and post to catch up with and the garden has "blossomed" while I've been away but I'm relaxed.  A holiday in the sunshine, with my DD and DGS and without a visit to the local accident and emergency department or a trip in a Turkish ambulance, high five!

Sunday 17 June 2012

Thursday 14 June 2012

Visiting the Indigo Master

This is almost the last post about my visit to Japan.  It's photo heavy, for which I make no apology.  In a final post I will share the things I made on the tour and in the future you will see my work incorporating what I learned in the way of skills and design.  I have already realised that I now consider a large percentage of my fabric stash "harsh", "garish" and lacking subtlety of any kind.
This post is about one of the most memorable and amazing days of the whole tour, almost a religious experience, the day we went to visit the Indigo Master.

My Indigo Sister, Blandina has written beautifully about our visit to Noguchi san on the Japanese Textile Study Tour here and our Sensei, Bryan has posted here.  Bryan is currently exploring the origins of katazome dyeing on his blog.  In those posts you will find a lot of detail, technique and explanation whereas I feel my post is about to become very emotional and subjective.
Our learning about katazome, about persimmon paper and stencil cutting began late one night after a visit to the onsen and then a great pizza meal cooked especially for us by Tohei.   It was probably the last thing I wanted to do (my bed was calling) but Bryan was determined that we should have some understanding of the process before our visit to Noguchi san's katazome studio the following day.  We also needed to prepare stencilled fabric to dye.
He was right of course, when Noguchi san and his son,
Kaz (the eight generation of stencil dyers there), welcomed us and started to describe and demonstrate their craft it was helpful to have had the introduction from Bryan, so many new terms, new processes and important stages.
I feel sure that the workshop had been especially tidied for our visit, it was wonderful and much appreciated.
So many delicious nooks and crannies, seasoned and loved tools, a feeling of being in a completely different time and place from the Tokyo we'd left at the door of the studio, as we stepped down onto the hard earth floor.

We were able to dye our prepared stencilled pieces in the fermented indigo vats and then Noguchi san washed them four times for us, removing all remnants of paste and sawdust.
 They then dried in the sunshine. 
Kaz demonstrated his skill under the watchful eye of his father, if he was nervous it didn't show.

We were all incredibly privileged to be allowed to use the wonderful stencil to print a whole kimono length as we'd seen Kaz do (well, in a similar but far less skilful and confident way) and it was shared out so that we could dye our own piece.
Whole kimono lengths are taken outside still on their boards and dried in the fresh air before dyeing.  (The photo above shows Kaz taking our length out to dry, with gaps between each section of stencilling so that there were no arguments).
A kimono would be placed on "tenterhooks" to hold each section separate from the next while it was in the indigo vat.  Noguchi san showed us some wonderful examples of his work.  He prints the kimono lengths on both sides, the pattern matched up perfectly.  The resulting yukata (summer kimono) sell in the best department stores for very high prices.
Noguchi san also modelled a stunning fireman's jacket for us
We looked at some used stencils (and Bryan valiantly tried to persuade Noguchi san to sell some to us), they are incredible works of art and skill in their own right.
No luck on the stencils but Bryan did negotiate the purchase of some of the kimono lengths.
Expensive still (but not considering the skill involved) but what an opportunity, what a souvenir, how impossible would it be to cut?  Nat and I agreed to share a length so we had to cut it before either of us could leave Japan but any further cuts will be very carefully considered.

Our pieces hung on tenterhooks, the indigo transforming magically in the sunshine to deep blue, the vats were in perfect condition.
We drank green tea and ate a 'picnic' lunch in the workshop, admiring the glorious simplicity in which the indigo master and his family lived, a timewarp, a hidden world, we were running out of suitable language to sum up our experiences and we were incredibly grateful to Bryan whose slowly burning seventeen year master/respectful student relationship with Noguchi san had allowed us to make this visit.

Want more?
So this picture just about sums up my feelings in launching this workshop and inviting you to look inside. It was taken during the spring workshop as I was explaining the complexities of Noguchi san's indigo unique  fermentation technique.
 
The lid is open. What is inside is very valuable and interesting and has great potential for all the indigo sisters. (No indigo brothers last time.) It was up to me to explain it as simply and clearly as I could.  With a deep breath, enthusiasm and hope, I ask you to take a look at the Autumn 2012 brochure. file:///Users/bryanwhitehead/Desktop/docs.google.com:.webloc